Remove persistent WeatherBug notification in Android 6.0.1?
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By Usama Jawad96 · Posted
Microsoft: Windows Autopatch is the safest way to upgrade enterprise PCs to Windows 11 by Usama Jawad A few hours ago, Microsoft published a guide for IT admins explaining how they can use Intune to upgrade Windows 10 devices to Windows 11, while also migrating from Active Directory (AD) to a cloud-native system like Entra ID. The company has also published a similar guide, but switched the tool to Windows Autopatch, claiming that it is the fastest and safest way for enterprise PCs to update to Windows 11. For those unaware, Windows Autopatch is a way to automate updates while empowering IT admins to ensure that endpoints are healthy and compliant through ring-based, staggered deployments. IT admins also have the ability to reverse updates easily if something does go wrong. In the current scenario of upgrading enterprise PCs to Windows 11 using Autopatch, Microsoft has outlined a four-step process. The first involves assessing Windows 11-readiness across your organization, assigning Entra ID groups to devices, and then mapping these groups to rollout rings in Autopatch. Next, IT admins should segment devices into Windows Autopatch groups, while also defining staggered rollout policies controlled through rollout rings. At a base level, there should be two groups: devices that meet the criteria of Windows 11 and should upgrade to it, and Windows 10 hardware that doesn't meet the criteria and should receive Extended Security Updates (ESUs). Devices should be spread in a logical manner across various rings, with each group having a dedicated update policy. The third step involves defining the speed of staggered update rollouts. This can be managed through the Intune admin center, which gives you control over sequencing, pace, and deferrals. Finally, IT admins should monitor the rollout of the Windows 11 update through the Windows Autopatch feature update reporting module. It contains the update status across devices, trendlines within historical views, and remediation guidance for errors. Microsoft believes that this combination of Windows Autopatch groups and Intune is the best way to upgrade to Windows 11, so IT admins should get started right away as support for Windows 10 is ending on October 14, 2025. -
By seeprime · Posted
TDP of this CPU is 60 watts higher than Ryzen 7600. At s usage rate of four hours per day, at a cost of twelve cents per KWh, the Intel cost $10.51 more per year to use. I don't see a real advantage to Intel here. -
By DentedAphid7 · Posted
Lmao. Cries about not playing those games not installed and yet don't ever want to touch them. -
By ShadeOfBlue · Posted
If I want to merge folder trees that have a similar structure, Beyond Compare is always my first choice. It's not free but it's awesome. If I want to just scan a whole drive/folder and find duplicates that are taking up space, I like Czkawka. -
By David Uzondu · Posted
Claude Code gets throttled as Anthropic rolls out fresh usage caps by David Uzondu Claude Code, the AI-in-terminal utility developed by Anthropic and launched back in February, is getting updated usage limits following weeks of user complaints about being abruptly cut off. Many developers on the "$200/month Max plan" found their access blocked after just a few requests, with no explanation from the company. In a recent thread posted to X, the AI lab explained that it has seen "unprecedented demand since launch," pointing to some of its heaviest users who were running the tool continuously in the background 24/7, with one person reportedly consuming tens of thousands of dollars in model usage on a single $200 subscription. Anthropic also claimed that some users were violating its usage policy by sharing and reselling accounts, which impacts system capacity for everyone. These factors all led the company to announce new weekly limits that will be added on top of the existing five-hour caps, effective August 28. Max plan subscribers will have the option to buy additional usage at standard API rates if they hit their cap. Here's what the new weekly limits look like: Pro Plan ($20/month): An estimated 40 to 80 hours of usage with the Sonnet 4 model. Max Plan ($100/month): An estimated 140 to 280 hours with Sonnet 4 and 15 to 35 hours with the top-tier Opus 4 model. Max Plan ($200/month): An estimated 240 to 480 hours with Sonnet 4 and 24 to 40 hours with Opus 4. Per TechCrunch, the company provided these hour-based estimates, noting that the actual numbers may vary based on the size of a project's codebase. What's interesting is how this new structure compares to the old marketing. Anthropic previously advertised its $200 Max plan as offering 20 times more usage than the Pro plan. Based on these new hourly estimates, that multiple is now closer to six. It is possible the 20x figure still applies when measured in tokens or raw compute, but, according to TechCrunch, the company has not clarified that point.
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